Nagpur: Nearly four years after the Nagpur Municipal Corporation (NMC) slipped into bureaucratic control, elected civic governance is set to return to Nagpur. The state govt has ordered a special general body meeting on Feb 6 to elect the mayor and deputy mayor.
The order, issued by the Urban Development Department (UDD) through the Nagpur divisional commissionerate, follows the conclusion of the long-delayed civic elections held on Jan 15, with results declared the next day. The verdict delivered a commanding mandate to the BJP, clearing the way for the party to secure its fourth consecutive term at NMC.
The special meeting will be convened at 11am at the Kavivarya Suresh Bhat Auditorium in Reshimbagh. District collector Vipin Itankar, who will act as the election officer, will preside over the meeting. The agenda will be limited to the election of the mayor and deputy mayor for a 2.5-year term. Nominations for both posts will be filed on Feb 4, while withdrawals will take place on the morning of Feb 6, ahead of voting.
NMC secretary Ranjana Lade said the agenda for the Feb 6 meeting will be issued on Jan 30. Along with the mayor and deputy mayor, elections to appoint 16 members of the standing committee will also be held on the same day, while elections to other subject committees, the ruling party leader's post, and the leader of the opposition will follow later.
The move brings to an end an unusually prolonged phase of administrative control that began in March 2022, when the previous general body's term expired. Civic elections were repeatedly deferred due to ward delimitation exercises and litigation over OBC reservation. In the absence of an elected House, senior bureaucrats ran the corporation, with major policy decisions and political accountability largely on hold.
The January elections marked the restoration of electoral politics to Nagpur's civic space after the longest interruption in the corporation's history.
The BJP registered a landslide victory, winning 102 of the 151 seats and comfortably crossing the majority mark of 76. Congress finished a distant second with 34 seats, while smaller parties and independents shared the remaining seats. The emphatic margin leaves the BJP free of alliance compulsions, ensuring its control over the mayoralty, deputy mayor's post, and the powerful standing committee.
However, despite the overwhelming mandate, the BJP has yet to announce its mayoral nominee. Party sources said the choice will be finalised after consultations involving Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis and Union minister Nitin Gadkari, with considerations including regional representation, organisational loyalty, and future electoral strategy. Political observers say a BJP mayor would reinforce continuity in Nagpur's urban governance, keeping the city firmly within the party's political grip.
Meanwhile, Congress has moved to consolidate its position by electing Sanjay Mahakalkar as its leader in the NMC House, signalling an attempt to play a more assertive opposition role despite its reduced strength.
TIMELINE | Return of Elected Civic Rule
• March 2022: NMC general body dissolved; administrative rule begins
• 2022–2024: Elections delayed due to ward delimitation, OBC quota litigation
• Jan 15: NMC polls held
• Jan 16: Results declared; BJP wins clear majority
• Feb 4: Nominations for mayor, deputy mayor
• Feb 6: Special general body meeting; mayoral election
NUMBER GAME | NMC 2026
• Total seats: 151
• Majority mark: 76
Party-wise tally:
• BJP: 102
• Congress: 34
• AIMIM: 6
• IUML: 4
• Shiv Sena (UBT): 2
• NCP (Ajit): 1
• Shiv Sena (Shinde): 1
• BSP: 1
Key Political Takeaways
• BJP crosses majority by 26 seats
• 4th consecutive term likely
• No alliance arithmetic needed
• Mayor, deputy mayor, standing committee firmly with BJP